Domain

A domain (or sometimes called a “domain name”) is the part of a URL that looks like example.com. On my website, my domain is veganstraightedge.com. It doesn’t have to end in “.com”. It could be .org, .net, .info, .biz, .me or country codes 3 like .io, .it, .co or all kinds of new TLDs4 like .limo, .club, .ninja.

You can buy a domain from any number of registrars. I recommend hover.com if you’re just buying one or a few domains. If you find yourself owning 10 or more, I suggest using dnsimple.com. I implore you to avoid godaddy.com. Even if they’re selling the domain you want for a few dollars cheaper than others. Everyone I’ve ever known that used GoDaddy regretted using them later.

Try to think about the longevity of your the name you choose. Will you still want to use this domain in ten years? In fifty? Always a reliable classic is your name at some TLD. shanebecker.com, shanebecker.me, etc.

Some websites that provide the publishing software (like SqaureSpace or Wordpress) will also sell you a domain directly through your account settings. And when you buy it through them, they also configure it to Just Work™ for your site.

It’s critically important that you don’t use a subdomain (like veganstraightedge.wordpress.com or veganstraightedge.tumblr.com) as your primary website. The reason is that you don’t really own any subdomain.5 If you ever decide to move to different publishing software (like from Tumblr to Wordpress) none of your URLs can be moved. And good URLs don’t change.

Publish

Once you’ve got a domain, publish something. Publish lots of somethings. Publish to your heart’s content. And then publish some more.

Publish short text notes. Publish longer structured articles with titles and HTML formatting (if you want). Publish bookmarked links, photos and videos. Anything that you currently publish on other sites, like Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, etc.

Later on in the process of expatriation from the corporate silos that currently control what and how we publish to the autonomy of the Indie Web, there’s a process called syndication where a copy of your post is sent to a silo for greater distribution or visibility for people you want to see your post but don’t go to your site. E.g. friends and family on Facebook.

We call this process of syndication POSSE. That stands for Publish (on your) Own Site, Syndicate Elsewhere. I’ll cover POSSE in more depth in a syndication specific post.

About Me

Or about you, really.

On your site, there’s probably a header, sidebar or footer place for you to put some information about yourself. Your name, your photo or avatar, some URLs and usernames on other sites. If you feel comfortable doing so, your phone number and/or email address. Maybe even a short paragraph or two bio about you. You can expand this even further by creating a page (typically called “About” at the path of /about). You can also add a resume/cv and/or portfolio. Or you can do something completely different. It’s your site, your identity.

Summary

Get a domain. Find some publishing software (or if you’re feeling adventurous, build your own). Publish some posts. Include an about me section. Write an about me page (and for bonus points, a resume).

Now you’re on the Indie Web!

There’s some additional technology under the covers that will improve your experience, but all of that requires that you’ve done these parts first.

1. Unless someone printed this article from a webpage and handed it to you.^

2. Technically we only ever rent our domains from registrars who in turn rent them from ICANN, but that's a different post for a different time.^

3. Something to consider when buying a country-specific domain is the longevity of that domain. Are there certain rules that apply to who can own a domain in that country? Eg, do you have to be a citizen of that country? Does that country have laws that don’t apply to you as a non-citizen, but would apply to your domain that might cause your domain to get shut down by a foreign government? Some countries have a “morality” clause and if you’re LGBQT, they might shut down your website at anytime. See for example .ly domains, like Violet Blue's short domain, getting shut down by the Libyan government.^

4. The part that comes after the dot in a domain is called a Top Level Domain. The “com” in “veganstraightedge.com” is the TLD.^

5. Unless, of course, you also own the domain that the subdomain is on. Like if I decided to use blog.veganstraightedge.com instead of veganstraightedge.com. I still own veganstraightedge.com so the blog subdomain is still completely under my control.^

Why Get on the Indie Web?

In a word, autonomy.

Call it freedom or agency or control or ownership. Call it any number of things, but no one knows how to live your life better than you do.

The current state of the web for most of us most of time looks like this. We go to one website or app and publish some post. Then we go to another site or app to publish a different kind of post. Or maybe we cross post it from one site to another. All of those sites and apps are by other people or corporations. They all have a different set of users with different usernames, and different networks, with their own cultures and norms.

New sites and apps come along. We try them out. Some go out of business or get acquired and “sunsetted”. The sites get shut down. Our posts and URLs get destroyed forever. Rinse and repeat on another site over and over.

Nevermind the communities that take shape on these sites. Nevermind that when these sites get shut down the communties get disappeared too. We all find support through communities. If a community that we’ve come to depend on disappears, that can have a real impact on our lives.

Get Free

All good things are wild and free. But we can’t be wild and free on an imperialist website silo1 that’s owned and controlled by someone else, especially a silo owned and controlled by a corporation whose business model is surveillance and advertising. We can only be wild and free through a model of self-determination and mutual aid.

Any website that we publish our creative works to controls the terms and context under which we publish.

If they want to delete our posts or account, they can for any reason with no warning. If they want to sell or give information about us and our activity to advertisers, law enforcement or governments, they can without our knowledge or consent. If any money is made from your published posts (say, from advertising views), you don’t see any of that money.

Stay Wild

We love power and hate authority.
— Crimethinc

By participating in the Indie Web, you are helping to create an alternative to the corporate-owned, advertising-subsidized surveillance state of imperialist websites like Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, YouTube (and all the rest).

The Indie Web looks like owning your personal website and publishing all of your creative works there. Notes, articles, photos, videos, events, rsvps, likes, bookmarks… all of the things. You publish how and where you want. Your friends, family, followers and fans can read and view your posts how and where they they want.

1. When I say a “silo”, think of a corn silo. There’s stuff inside of it. There is not stuff outside of it. It does not connect to other things. Everything is just inside of it. Some people call these “walled gardens”, but I think that’s giving them too rosy of a description. I don’t think Facebook is a garden where things bloom and grow. I don’t want to eat anything that’s grown in there. ^

What is the Indie Web?

It’s not a place. It’s not social network. It’s not a website, Slack channel or secret club. It’s not on the dark web. It’s not a new protocol. It’s not a new format. It’s not an app or specific software.

Fundamentally, the Indie Web is an idea!

The idea is that any person can and should have their own website on their own domain that they own and control.

I can’t speak for anyone else, but I believe that as a culture we must expand our definition of human rights to include two more things.

All humans have the right to access, read and participate on the Internet free of restriction, censorship and surveillance.

All humans have the right to own a website that they have complete control of free from censorship for the entirety of their life and that is preserved after their death.

(Adapted from a lunch time tech talk I gave at Pivotal office in Santa Monica, California on 2016–04–26.)

The Problem

All empires fall.

The corporate web is an oligarchy of disconnected silos whose business model is surveillance. We are their product and their customers are: advertisers, cops and governments.

When the very few own (corporations) the only choices (means of production and distributions) for the very many (us), we don’t have much choice at all. Pepsi or Coke (both brown sugar water). Bush or Gore (son of a president, son of a senator). YouTube or Vimeo. Same shit, different pile.

It stifles free speech and limits autonomy.

When we publish our creative works imperialist silos, we are completely beholden to their every whim. We can only do what they allow us to do within their silo on their terms. If they change their terms, which they can do at anytime, we have to play by those new rules.

Silos

When I say a “silo”, think of a corn silo. There’s stuff inside of it. There is not stuff outside of it. It does not connect to other things. Everything is just inside of it.

Some people call these “walled gardens”, but I think that’s giving them too rosy of a description. I don’t think Facebook is a garden where things bloom and grow. I don’t want to eat anything that’s grown in there.

Content Censorship

If you post a photo to Instagram and enough people report it or a moderator (if they have those) sees it and decides that this photo violates Instagram content terms of service for nudity. If they delete your photo or account, there’s literally nothing you can do about it. There’s no notice. There’s no export. There’s no “here’s your data, get out of here”. You have no recourse.

This happens all of the time on Instagram. People’s photos that may or may not have nudity. Maybe a photo of a painting or of a sculpture. Ancient Roman sculptures are often nude. A photo of an Ancient Roman often has nipples in it. Sometimes those photos get deleted.

Sometimes people aren’t nude or photos don’t have nudity in them. But enough people report it and the system kicks in and deletes it. And you have no recourse.

Terms of Service

Terms of Service get changed all of the time. I’ve lost track of all of the times that these sites have changed their terms of service. And let’s be honest, most of us don’t read them in the first place, let alone the updates, because their written by lawyers for lawyers.

There was a time on Facebook where there was basically a drag queen purge. Facebook decided to get quoteunquote serious about quoteunquote real names. What a quoteunquote real name is varies pretty wildly across the planet and Facebook is a global website at this point. Just the order of names and how people use them in different cultures, languages and countries varies wildly. Most drag queens got kicked off because they weren’t using their quoteunquote real name. And this can affect trans folks as well.

There was a woman who worked at Facebook and didn’t use the name that was on her birth certificate as her employee name (on her employee badge the whole time she worked there). When she left, she was later flagged as not using her quoteunquote real name and was kicked off of Facebook. For using the same name that was on her employee badge.

Privacy

Facebook changes its privacy policy all of the time too. Every time they do, there’s a whole swath of people who are like “oh shit, my mom can see my [whatever] posts now”. All of these posts that people thought were private or some degree of private are now public or some degree of public when the private policy changed.

A privacy policy is both a legal document and a technical implementation. So, all of us that build software affect the real world use of privacy policies. The lawyers that write the privacy policy also dictate that implementation.

Advertising / Monetization

I mentioned earlier that we are the product, we are not the customer. Facebook is an advertising company. Google is an advertising company. I don’t know of any way that I can give Facebook money as a customer other than to buy a promoted post or to buy a little ad in the sidebar. That makes me not a customer. It’s impossible for me to give them money.

The only thing that I can give them is my content and information about me and my behavior that is then sold to their customers.

If Facebook wants to run an advertisement for Sea World next to my post about the atrocities of Orcas in captivity, I can’t stop them. I have no influence on that.

If one of my posts is wildly popular, Facebook serves more views and therefore more ads and makes more money. I don’t see any part of that money.

The Algorithm

None of our feeds, none of our timelines are, in fact, timelines anymore. There used to be a way that you could temporarily switch your Facebook feed to be chronological instead of sorted by “cool” or “interestingness” (for some values of interesting). But it was never a permanent switch and it’s gone now.

Non-chronological feeds really break up conversations. Like when people do “tweet storms” on Twitter where they’re replying to themselves in order to make a point that’s longer than one tweet and Twitter shows you the “most interesting” tweet and it’s the 7th of 18 tweets, that doesn’t make a lot of sense.

If someone you know or knew has died and they had a Facebook account and someone goes back to one of their old posts and likes it or comments on it, that might push it back up to the top of your feed in a way that’s unexpected and often unpleasant to see the ghosts of your life come back to haunt you in a way.

Identity

I’ve started calling them imperialist websites because they are colonizing the web. They propagate their URLs, not our URLs, by making us users on their URLs.

Twitter.com/username. Username.tumblr.com.

Anytime I want to give you my contact information on someone else’s silo, I also have to basically advertise for them. I have to spread their germ all over the place.

So, imagine I’m on Wordpress and I like using Wordpress right now, but some time in the future I decide that Tumblr is place I want to be. Wordpress actually has pretty good content export. You can take your content with you. But you can’t take your URLs.

Your username.wordpress.com will always be owned by Wordpress.com.

Tumblr, even if they wanted to, and I don’t think they do, can’t have subdomains resolve from wordpress.com. If you I move to Tumblr my URL will be username.tumblr.com.

When we use other people’s silos, we are provided an identity by them from them that isn’t portable and is fairly fragile.

Longevity

You know how they say that “the web never forgets”?

Remember that woman who tweeted “going to Africa hope I don’t get AIDS”, got on a plane, landed, and her life was ruined. The web will never forget that. Every time she applies for a job and someone Googles her, that story will be the first several pages.

But it turns out that the web does forget a lot of things. Every time a site gets acquired and “sunsetted” or they run out money or they go out of business, that stuff often disappears and isn’t archived anywhere. Archive.org is certainly better than nothing, but it’s far from perfect. Especially any content that lived behind a password or inside of binary files, like Flash.

On the IndieWebCamp wiki, we have a whole page of past and pending site deaths. Sometimes sites will just up and disappear. Sometimes they give us a little bit of notice. Sometimes there’s an export tool. Sometimes there’s not.

Most people reading this will probably have an account at most or all of these sites: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Vimeo, Tumblr, Wordpress. Many also had accounts at Friendster, Tribe, MySpace, Delicious, Magnolia, Gowalla, Geocities. But no one has an account at any of those (on the second list) anymore. And all of the content that we created on those sites is gone.

All of those super emo feeling you posted to MySpace, they’re all gone. Some of the great web designers of our generation got started on Geocities. That stuff is gone forever. And sure, it was sparkling animated GIFs and neon colors. But that’s important history. Yahoo bought it, left it alone for a while, and then decided one day to turn it off.

There was an effort to archive it. There was once a massive torrent file floating around. But it’s not at geocities.com. It’s like that moment in Star Wars when Alderaan gets blown up by the Death Star. There was a bajillion voices were silenced all at once. Or at least, I think Obi-Wan says. A bajillion.

An Alternative

But there’s got to be a better way! Right?

The early days on the web were kind of indie web. There were no silos. There were no tools to make publishing easy. You created your own website. You uploaded your own files. You did your own thing. But it was kind of an exclusive club of nerds willing to deal with: DNS, hosting, FTP, CGI-BIN, permissions and HTML.

“Web 2.0”

In the mid-oughts, tools came along that lowered the bar considerably for publishing on the web: Live Journal, Blogger, Flickr, Twitter, Pownce, etc. Slowly more and more of us started abandoning our personal websites, publishing entirely on silos instead. For a time, we thought that was good because we believed that they had our best interests in mind. But fool me once, twice, thrice… when will we learn?

Human Rights

I believe that all humans have the right to access, view and read the web free of censorship and restriction. I don’t think that’s terribly unique. I think a lot of people share that idea.

But I believe that merely having access to something just makes us consumers. I think it’s important that we’re also producers or participants.

I believe that every human has the right to own and control a completely autonomous website for their lifetime. And one that will live on even after their death.

Indie Web

In a Nutshell

No Hermits

I mean, you can be a hermit if you want. But you can still be a part of communities you care about.

POSSE

And you can do that using a technique we call “POSSE”. Publish (on your) Own Site, Syndicate Elsewhere.

The reverse (though less preferred) is also possible. PESOS. Publish Elsewhere, Syndicate (on your) Own Site.

No Monoculture

The IndieWeb is not a singular codebase or technology. Builders scratch their own itches. People are using PHP, Node, Python, Go, Ruby. Jekyll and Wordpress. Heroku, self hosted, EC2, app engine. Static sites and database driven ones.

Dark Matter

My personal website is powered by some Ruby on Rails software that I’m building called Dark Matter. I call it that because, just like the universe is made of way more than the visible matter, the web is also made of way more than just a handful of imperialist silos.

The Now

I can publish several types of content: notes, articles, photos, events, videos, etc. Then I can syndicate them to Twitter with one click.

The Next

More syndication endpoints. More post types. An iOS app. And a lot more.

Halp?!

If you want to help me improve Dark Matter, I would very much love that. There’s lots to do in different areas. Something for everyone.

Original Version

The original version, as designed by Crystal Beasley, was flawed certainly, but was a source of inspiration and starting off point. My goal of my redesign was to honor the spirit of the original while improving it.

Original Indie Web Camp logo designed by Crystal Beasley

Redesign Versions

Below are the final iterations of the Indie Web Camp logo (shown in its full lockup). There are also square and white versions. The logo files are are available as: Sketch, Illustrator (.ai), PDF and PNGs at various sizes. I’m very happy with the final product.